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Ashton’s Spokesman Describes Iran-Powers Talks Tough, Complicated, Precise

Iran nuclear Talk - Michael Mann
Iran nuclear Talk - Michael Mann

 

“We had three days of tough work. As we have said before, the negotiations are complicated and precise and we are trying to compile an agreement,” Mann told FNA early Saturday, hours after Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and Ashton ended their last meeting in Vienna on Friday evening without holding any press conference.

Asked why Zarif and Ashton had called off their joint press conference, Mann said, “Nothing has been agreed. (We will announce it) when everything is agreed upon. That’s the reason we don’t want to break things into pieces and announce after any meeting where we are.”

After three days of talks, Iran’s deputy chief negotiator Seyed Abbas Araqchi said on Friday evening that the Vienna nuclear talks with the world powers will continue until achievement of results, but meantime reiterated that Iran will not accept a discussion of its defense program and will only agree to a deal which respects its rights.

Speaking to reporters after three days of intensive negotiations with the delegations of the six world powers in Vienna on Friday night, Araqchi, also a deputy foreign minister, said, “The nuclear talks ended an hour ago, and the negotiations were very serious.”

“Our discussions were more or less free from tension, and everyone favors attainment of a final agreement,” he explained.

Araqchi pointed out that “the generalities, the framework and principles have already been agreed in the Geneva deal. Thus, We intended to start drafting the deal, but we couldn’t due to some wide differences”.

“Drafting the deal will be impossible until we reach a single view about all issues,” he continued.

Yet, the senior negotiator voiced pleasure in the trend of the talks, saying, “The trend of the talks is good and constructive, but has not led to any specific result yet. The talks continue and have not failed.”

“No tangible results were made, but talks will continue.”

Asked about the cause of the differences, Araqchi rejected the reports by some western media outlets claiming that Iran and the world powers hold different views over 13 topics, and said such reports “are just speculations and should not receive attention”.

He said the differences are even more in number. “Differences exist; were there no difference, there wouldn’t be any need to negotiation. Our duty is resolving these differences, bringing views closer and working out a single text (for a final agreement). There was no specific progress in the first session, and this is not unnatural; we hope to make up for that in other sessions.”

The deputy chief negotiator said Iran will not retreat. “We stand firm on our rights. We will have 6 more months if we fail to work out a deal by July 20.”

He said Iran will not allow a discussion of its missile or defense program in the nuclear talks. “Our defense equipment can no way go under discussion in the negotiations.”

Araqchi stressed that Iran is not in a rush to push the talks into a final phase of concluding an agreement at any price. “There is no push to obtain an agreement by July 20 at any price.”

“We (only) concede to an agreement which will be in line with our interests, meet our demands and establish the Iranian nation’s rights,” he continued.

“Yet, there is still a chance for striking a deal by July 20 only if our demands are met and our people’s nuclear rights are observed,” he reiterated.

“If we come to conclude such an agreement by July 20, it will be good, but if we won’t, that would not mean a catastrophe and that wouldn’t be the end of the world, (as) we will have 6 more months to negotiate.”

“We hope that the talks continue in a logical, rational and realistic manner and yield result within the deadline.”

Asked if the Ukrainian crisis has affected the trend or results of the nuclear talks between Iran and the world powers, Araqchi said the Ukraine issue is a very serious global challenge, but it has not affected the Iran-powers nuclear talks. “All parties, including the Russian side, want the (Iran nuclear) talks to remain unaffected by any other issue, including the Ukrainian issue… .”

He said the nuclear talks will be continued at different levels, “depending on the needs and topics of the sessions; the negotiations should continue as much as needed, we are ready and there have been some planning in this regard”.

Senior diplomats of Iran and the six world powers convened in Vienna on Wednesday for another round of negotiations on a permanent and final solution to their nuclear standoff.

The Iranian negotiators had several rounds of bilateral talks with the delegations of the EU and the Group 5+1, including a rather lengthy meeting with the US team, in the last three days.

A few hours before Araqchi’s final statements to reporters, a senior diplomat close to the Iranian team of negotiators urged the Western states to stop their excessive demands, reiterating that Iran is standing firm on its rights.

“The West should give up its excessive demands and gather a precise assessment of the realities existing on the ground,” the diplomat told FNA in Vienna on Friday afternoon, stressing that the policy of pressuring Iran has always proved futile and backfired.

The source said the Iranian negotiators have come to Vienna to establish the nation’s rights, reiterating that they would never retreat along this path.

He said “difference in views, specially around such a vital discussion as Iran’s nuclear issue, is considered to be natural”, but “given the recent developments, the western states are displaying that they are not practicing the pragmatism that seemed to have developed in them to a certain level”.

Yet, the diplomat underlined that “the window of opportunity is still open for the western parties to step onto the realm of pragmatism”.

When Zarif, and his team of aides and experts, arrived in Vienna, he told reporters Tehran would participate in the talks with firm determination.

“We have come here with a decisive will” and seek to defend the Iranian nation’s nuclear rights, Zarif said.

Noting that Iran and the G5+1 are scheduled to hold three other rounds of talks by July 20, he said none of the seven delegations had prepared any draft agreement, although they had certain issues in mind.

Then after two days of talks with the top negotiators of the sextet, Zarif hoped Friday morning that the opposite parties would be as determined as Tehran for striking a final nuclear deal in Vienna.

“The will is the most important parameter for success in any negotiation and we are determined and we hope that our counterparts will also be the same,” Zarif wrote on his Twitter page on Friday morning.

On Thursday, Araqchi said the nuclear talks in the Austrian capital were “slow and very difficult, although dominated by an atmosphere of good will”.

Earlier on Thursday, Mann voiced satisfaction in the outcomes of the morning meeting between Zarif and Ashton, saying the talks were “useful”.

“Well, it was a useful meeting,” Mann said in a phone interview with FNA on Thursday afternoon.

The negotiations between Tehran and the Group 5+1 are part of efforts to seal a final deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program.

On November 24, Iran and the Group 5+1 sealed a six-month Joint Plan of Action to lay the groundwork for the full resolution of the West’s decade-old dispute with Iran over the latter’s nuclear energy program.

In exchange for Tehran’s confidence-building bid to limit certain aspects of its nuclear activities, the sextet of the world powers agreed to lift some of the existing sanctions against Tehran and impose no nuclear-related sanctions on Iran during the six-month period.

Following the breakthrough interim agreement, Iran and the sextet accepted to send their senior negotiating teams to monthly meetings to discuss a final and comprehensive deal until July. If the seven nations fail to agree on a final deal by then, the Geneva interim agreement will be extended for another 6 months.

Since the November agreement, the seven delegations have met several times, including the last round in Vienna on April 8 and 9.

At the beginning of the last round of the talks on April 8, the Iranian Foreign Ministry issued a statement reiterating that its team of negotiators would not discuss any topic but the country’s nuclear standoff with the West in its talks with the six world powers.

This round of the talks was the first Iran-powers meeting focused on drafting a final deal.

 

by Fars News Agency

Commander: 5th Iranian Border Guard Still Alive in Pakistan

Hossein Zolfaqari
Hossein Zolfaqari

“Based on the proofs and evidence we have, sergeant Jamshid Danayee-Far, one of the border guards abducted by Jeish al-Adl grouplet, is alive,” Zolfaqari said, addressing a ceremony in the Southern province of Hormozgan on Wednesday.

He said that diplomatic efforts are underway to provide the ground for his freedom.

Noting that the Islamabad government has held a special meeting chaired by Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for restoring security to its borders with Iran, Zolfaqari said, “The result of these negotiations was the development of security relations (between Iran and Pakistan), specially at border crossings to fight outlaws and armed grouplets.”

After Jeish Al-Adl claimed late February that it has killed Danayee-Far, Zolfaqari rejected the claim and said it was not substantiated by any proof or evidence.

“Don’t accept any quotes about the issue of the border guards, there is no proof substantiating the martyrdom of Danayee-Far and no evidence has been presented to us in this regard,” Zolfaqari told reporters in Tehran in late February.

The five Iranian border guards were abducted in Jakigour region of Iran’s Sistan and Balouchestan Province on February 6 and taken to Pakistan. Reports said earlier that one of them, Danayee-Far, was killed late February but the official sources haven’t confirmed his death yet.

Iranian Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said in April that Tehran will continue pursuing the fate of the 5th border guard abducted by Jeish al-Adl terrorist group.

Tehran would by no means accept the death of the fifth kidnapped border guard, Jamshid Danayee-Far, and will increase diplomatic efforts to find him, Rahmani Fazli said.

The Iranian interior minister took the Pakistani government responsible for following up the case of the last kidnapped Iranian border guard.

Vienna Nuclear Talks: Senior Negotiators Start Bargaining over Text of Nuclear Deal

Vienna nuclear talks
Vienna nuclear talks

 

 

The afternoon talks started at 16:30 local time. Unlike the morning session which was held at the UN offices in Vienna, the afternoon session is underway at Hotel Cobourg and is just attended by the Iranian team of negotiators headed by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and her aides.

The two teams are due to start drafting a comprehensive deal to end years of differences between Tehran and the West over the former’s nuclear program.

The negotiating team from Iran and the Group 5+1 (the US, Russia, China, Britain and France plus Germany) ended their first session in Vienna this morning. The talks that started in the Austrian capital at 10:00am (local time), and ended after almost half an hour was an introduction to the main negotiations.

Following the morning session, Michael Mann, the spokesman of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, wrote on his Twitter page that the seven delegations had “useful discussion”.

“Now internal consultations (among the G5+1 members) will take place. (The Iran-six powers) talks will resume this afternoon,” he added.

After Mann’s comments, the delegations of the six world powers held a meeting with Ashton, who presides the Group 5+1 negotiators in the talks with Iran.

The Iranian team of negotiators, accompanied by a team of legal advisors and experts, arrived in Vienna on Tuesday.

Upon arrival at Vienna airport on Tuesday, Iranian Foreign Minister and head of the country’s delegation in talks with the world powers Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tehran would participate in the talks with firm determination.

“We have come here with a decisive will” and seek to defend the Iranian nation’s nuclear rights, Zarif said.

Noting that Iran and the G5+1 are scheduled to hold three other rounds of talks by July 20, he said none of the seven delegations have prepared any draft agreement, although they have certain issues in mind.

Zarif and Ashton held a working dinner in Vienna on Tuesday night to confer on the latest developments in the talks between Tehran and the Group 5+1.

Also, a senior member of Iran’s negotiating team in talks with the six major world powers underlined that Tehran is resolved to do its best to remove possible barriers in the way of concluding a permanent deal with the Sextet, and urged the opposite side to do the same.

Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for legal and international affairs Seyed Abbas Araqchi told reporters in Vienna late Tuesday evening that Iran is fully prepared to achieve an agreement before the deadline.

He went on to say that we are very hopeful and so is the other side that an agreement can be reached before July 20, if there is goodwill and real political determination.

Araqchi added that there would be three additional rounds of negotiations besides the current one to make headway towards a permanent nuclear deal.

Two rounds of talks would be held in June while the third round could be stretched as long as 20 days in July, if there is a need for it, the Iranian official said.

He stressed negotiations were at the most sensitive stage, saying the start of drafting a final accord was the most difficult and complicated phase.

Araqchi acknowledged some of the issues were really difficult and there remained some big gaps.

Bridging the gaps is very difficult but not hopeless, he said.

The last round of negotiations between Iran and the G5+1 took place in Vienna on April 8 and 9.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry in a statement on April 8 reiterated that its team of negotiators would not discuss any topic but the country’s nuclear standoff with the West in its talks with the six world powers.

The talks between Tehran and the G5+1 are part of efforts to seal a final deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program.

Iran and the Group 5+1 representatives had several sessions of talks in Vienna on March 18-19 too. Following the breakthrough interim agreement between Iran and the six powers, the two sides accepted to send their senior negotiating teams to monthly meetings to discuss a final and comprehensive deal until July. If the seven nations fail to agree on a final deal by then, the Geneva interim agreement will be extended for another 6 months.

On November 24, Iran and the Group 5+1 sealed a six-month Joint Plan of Action to lay the groundwork for the full resolution of the West’s decade-old dispute with Iran over the latter’s nuclear energy program.

In exchange for Tehran’s confidence-building bid to limit certain aspects of its nuclear activities, the sextet of the world powers agreed to lift some of the existing sanctions against Tehran and impose no nuclear-related sanctions on Iran during the six-month period.

 

by Fars News Agency

Leader: Iranian Nation Will Never Bow to Foreign Pressures

Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei
Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei

 

 

“The (world) powers should know that the Iranian nation will not be brought to its knees, because it is a lively nation, and the youth of the country are moving ahead in the right direction,” Ayatollah Khamenei said in an address to a large gathering of Iranian people here in Tehran on Tuesday.

The Leader said reliance on domestic potentials to achieve scientific progress is key to withstanding the foreign pressures.

“If we develop the domestic capacities and focus on the indigenous capabilities, the US and the other powers will not be able to do a damn thing, either military or non-military (measures), and will not be able to defeat the Iranian nation by (mounting) pressure,” Imam Khamenei explained.

In relevant comments on April 30, Ayatollah Khamenei had underscored the importance of Iran’s progress in all fields, stressing that enhanced domestic capabilities will strengthen the country’s international position.

The Leader had also made it clear that the world bullies’ illogical behavior towards the Islamic Republic is a function of Iran’s power or weakness, and underlined, “Wherever we stand on our own feet and become strong, they (world powers) have to behave politely and logically.”

Referring to the country’s success to achieve the nuclear know-how by relying on the indigenous capabilities, Ayatollah Khamenei had announced that Iranian young scientists managed to produce 20-percent enriched uranium and manufacture nuclear fuel plates and rods after the “world’s bullies” tried to obstruct Iran’s peaceful nuclear activities.

 

by Tasnim News Agency

No written invitation yet been received from Saudi FM

Hossein-Amir-Abdollahian
Hossein-Amir-Abdollahian

 

 

Speaking to IRNA, the diplomat said Tehran has yet received no written invitation from Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal for his Iranian counterpartˈs visit to Riyadh, but the visit is on Iranˈs agenda.

Referring to the significant status of Iran and Saudi Arabia in the region, Amir-Abdollahian said Tehran welcomes holding talks with Riyadh to resolve regional problems, remove misunderstandings and promote bilateral relations.

On Tuesday, the Saudi foreign minister told reporters that Riyadh had invited Iranˈs foreign minister to visit the kingdom.

ˈWe sent an invitation to the foreign minister to visit Saudi Arabia,ˈ Prince Saud al-Faisal said.

 

by Khabar Online

US must make tough decisions in N-talks: Iran

Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi
Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi

 

 

Araqchi made the statement in reaction to remarks by US Secretary of State John Kerry who said on May 6 that Iran must make very tough decisions over its nuclear energy program.

“We … advise the American side to stop making decisions based on illusions and in fact it is the Americans that must make tough decisions in negotiations and stop threats and sanctions because this will be a historic decision for American officials,” Araqchi told reporters on Tuesday night.

He said that all P5+1 countries, especially the US, have come to the conclusion that threats and sanctions are “ineffective” tools in the course of negotiations.

The Iranian official made the remarks after Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met on Tuesday night ahead of the next round of high-level nuclear talks between the Islamic Republic and the P5+1 – the United States, China, Russia, France and Britain – plus Germany in the Austrian city of Vienna on Wednesday.

Araqchi, who is a member of the Iranian negotiating team, said that in addition to the Wednesday talks Iran and the six countries will hold three more rounds of negotiations within the six-month period, which he said would be “highly intensive”.

Iran and the P5+1 are working to hammer out a comprehensive deal following the interim accord that was reached in the Swiss city of Geneva on November 24, 2013 and went into force on January 20 this year.

Under the Geneva deal, the six countries pledged to provide Iran with some sanctions relief in exchange for the Islamic Republic agreeing to scale down certain aspects of its nuclear activities during a six-month period.

by Presstv

Palestine,Waiting for Liberation

palestine flags

Kayhan Int’l Political Desk

Today is the anniversary of one of the most sanguine crimes in modern history. The 14th of May is that bleak, black and bloody day when in 1948, following three decades of the rape of Palestine by the British, the illegitimate entity called Israel was born in the most unnatural way.

Immediately, the East European Jews, of Khazar origin who had been illegally settled in Palestine brutally attacked the sons of the soil, the Palestinians, killing many of them and driving out over seven hundred thousand men, women, and children to neighbouring lands.

This was the real holocaust that was carried out on the flimsy basis of the myth of the holocaust in Europe, allegedly perpetrated by the Nazis during World War 2.

If Hitler was the culprit of the supposed holocaust, then why was the Zionist entity set up somewhere in Germany, or Eastern Europe? Why were the peaceful Muslims of Palestinian made to pay with their homeland and life for an imaginary bloodbath?

The answers are obvious in view of the stifling of voices by the Western media and politicians to the demands for an academic and scholarly research on the supposed holocaust.

Moreover, there is no connection between the Zionists of East European Khazar origin and the ancient Israelite tribes, the overwhelming majority of whose members have long ceased to practice Judaism, and are mostly Muslim or Christian today.

Today the world is crying for justice. Today the Palestinians continue to reel under the jackboots of the Zionists with no end in sight for their plight of the past 66 years.

There is no one to redress their wrong. The UN has been powerless, while the US and the West European regimes that run it, on the spurious entity called Israel, indulge in all sorts of gimmicks in the name of peace, in order to deprive the Palestinians of peace of mind and tranquility of heart.

Ironically, the so-called Arabs, or more properly the Wahhabis, the Salafis, and the Takfiris, are openly prostrating at the altar of Zionism, in order to created disability in Muslim lands, and thus cast into oblivion the chronic case of the usurped land of Palestine.

In such a pathetic situation, it is only the awakening of Muslim consciences vis-à-vis the Takfiri terror and subsequently the Zionist zombies that will rescue Palestine and the Palestinians from the jaws of Israel.

It is Islamic unity of which the Zionists, the Takfiris, and the Godless West are afraid of. If Muslims overcome their narrow differences to solidify ranks, it will be impossible for Israel to exist on the map of Palestine.

Where there is a will there is a way. The resolve for weeding out Israel is there in the heart of every true Muslim, and this should be given practical shape.

Let us recall the words of the Father of the Islamic Revolution, Imam Khomeini (RA), who had called Israel “a cancerous tumour”. He had said that if every Muslim in the world were to pour a bucket of water then Israel would be drowned and erased from the world map.

The present Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, has proposed a very democratic solution to end this chronic question. He has suggested a referendum involving all original inhabitants of Palestine, whether Muslims, Christian, or the original Jews (but not the illegal Zionist migrants) to determine the fate of Palestine, stretching from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to the banks of the River Jordan in the east, and from the borders of Lebanon in the north to the borders of Sinai in the south.

If the so-called democratic West does not agree to this democratic solution, then we should be ready for arming the Palestinians.

Remember, over 8 centuries ago in 1187 AD, it was a united Muslim army made up Turks, Kurds, Iranians and Arabs that had liberated Palestine and Bayt al-Moqaddas by ending the 88-year long illegal existence of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem of the European Crusaders.

This is possible today, if Muslim regimes, instead of dancing to the devilish tunes of the West by supporting the Takfiris, knit ranks to seriously work towards the salvation of the Palestinian people by deciding once and for all, to end the illegal existence of Israel.

 

FM: Iran’s Defensive Capabilities No Subject for Talks with Powers

Zarif in Vienna
Zarif in Vienna

 

 

“Iran’s defensive issues and our defensive capabilities will not be an issue for negotiations,” Zarif told reporters after meeting EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton for a working dinner in Vienna on Tuesday night and before the start of a new round of talks between representatives of Iran and the Group 5+1 (the US, Russia, China, Britain and France plus Germany) in the Austrian capital.

He described his talks with Ashton as good, and said, “This round of negotiations is more sensitive since we will start writing (a comprehensive deal between the two sides).”

Asked if the negotiations will yield results by the end of the stated 6-month period (which ends on July 20), Zarif said, “I believe it is possible but it depends on how much good will and pragmatism the other side shows in the negotiations.”

Stressing that Iran seeks to materialize its rights of access and use of the peaceful nuclear technology and is not after the proliferation of atomic weapons, he said, “We believe atomic weapons are not beneficial to our country and we don’t have any problem if this is clearly shown to the world.”

The Iranian top diplomat underlined that the Iranian delegation has come to Vienna with a firm will to settle the differences with the world powers, but meantime, said if the two sides cannot reach an agreement by July 20, the time for implementing the interim agreement will not be extended automatically and it will need further negotiations.

The Iranian team of negotiators, accompanied by a team of legal advisors and experts, arrived in Vienna on Tuesday.

Representatives of Iran and the G5+1 are due to start compiling and drafting a comprehensive deal in their today meeting in Vienna.

The last round of negotiations took place in Vienna on April 8 and 9.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry in a statement on April 8 reiterated that its team of negotiators would not discuss any topic but the country’s nuclear standoff with the West in its talks with the six world powers.

The talks between Tehran and the G5+1 are part of efforts to seal a final deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program.

Iran and the Group 5+1 representatives had several sessions of talks in Vienna on March 18-19 too. Following the breakthrough interim agreement between Iran and the six powers, the two sides accepted to send their senior negotiating teams to monthly meetings to discuss a final and comprehensive deal until July. If the seven nations fail to agree on a final deal by then, the Geneva interim agreement will be extended for another 6 months.

On November 24, Iran and the Group 5+1 sealed a six-month Joint Plan of Action to lay the groundwork for the full resolution of the West’s decade-old dispute with Iran over the latter’s nuclear energy program.

In exchange for Tehran’s confidence-building bid to limit certain aspects of its nuclear activities, the sextet of the world powers agreed to lift some of the existing sanctions against Tehran and impose no nuclear-related sanctions on Iran during the six-month period.

by Fars News Agency

US Hints at Longer Military Presence in Afghanistan

US military in Afghanistan
US military in Afghanistan

 

James Dobbins, the US special envoy for Afghanistan, told reporters in Tokyo on Tuesday that Washington was considering the details of the withdrawal plan.
“We and our allies, I think, will be prepared for a continuing advisory mission, much smaller numbers than we have there today but still significant in terms of its ability to continue to improve the quality of the Afghan security forces,” Dobbins said  in the Japanese capital, where he is attending talks on supporting Afghanistan.
Dobbins says the exact size of the remaining troops will be decided in the next couple of months.

Iran President Stresses Promotion of Ties With World

Iran president - rouhani
Iran president - rouhani

 

In a meeting with Iran’s new ambassadors to Lebanon, Croatia, Kuwait, Cyprus, Poland, Lithuania and Tehran’s permanent envoy to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation before their departure for their countries of mission, the Iranian chief executive called on the envoys to make efforts to improve the Islamic Republic’s ties with other countries.
Pointing to the adoption of a UN resolution based on Iran’s World Against Violence and Extremism (WAVE) proposal, Rouhani said the ratification of the proposal indicates that there are opportunities and grounds for cooperation between world countries.
On December 18, 2013, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly voted to approve Rouhani’s WAVE proposal, which calls on all nations across the globe to denounce violence and extremism. The Iranian president made the proposal in his address to the UN Disarmament Conference in New York on September 25.